How-to: Use Delta SkyMiles to Book an Award Ticket to Europe: Searching Availability

Delta SkyMiles is notoriously one of the worst frequent flyer programs to use for award travel. The seat availability for award travel is slim, their website is buggy/broken and it’s difficult to book seats on SkyTeam partner airlines with Delta SkyMiles. These things said, it’s not at all impossible to book award travel on Delta–it just takes longer and requires you to have more flexibility. This series will help you understand how to squeeze the most amount of value out of your Delta SkyMiles.

Searching for award availability

The list goes in order of Delta hub size and therefore, number of flights offered. I recommend starting with the hubs first because you’ll likely have an easier time trying to get from YOUR AIRPORT to DELTA HUB.

The Delta SkyMiles booking process is very much based on trial and errors– the empowering part is knowing which options are best available to try so that you can find the seats you want. For most of these searches, we’ll be using the one-way search to speed up the process. (NOTE: Delta charges the full round-trip price in miles when booking a one-way, so I would never actually book a one-way, I’m just using it for my research. For this example, I’m trying to find flights that are being quoted at 60k miles–the USA to Europe low price). I always start by punching in my desired dates + desired cities and see what it spits out first:

For example:

As I expected, Delta returned a terrible option for this trip:

47 hours AND 115k miles to get from the US to France?! Good try Delta.

Next, click “View Award Calendar” on the left sidebar to make sure there aren’t any obvious dates available:

The “View Award Calendar” tool is extremely useful when trying to narrow down date availability fast. In this case, I could clearly see my preferred date of March 29 isn’t available at the low-award price but, if I have some flexibility, I could go on March 18 or 19th. This tool can help prevent hours and hours of needless searching.

For some of you (the exceptionally lucky ones), you might be done after this step. You can skip down to “Ticketing the Award” section below. For the majority that is still getting terrible results, we’ll continue in detail.

OK–So, we still need to find space from Charleston, SC (CHS) to Nantes, France (NTE) on March 29 for 60k SkyMiles. With Delta and their broke-ass system, the only way is to painstakingly search leg-by-leg, segment-by-segment until you find seats available at the low-award price. The best advice for booking flights from North America to Europe is to start by finding the flight that gets you across the Atlantic. Once you find space on a New York-Paris flight, you can then search for Your City-New York and then Paris-Your Final destination. It’s common that the tighter award space will always be the expensive transatlantic flights and not the cheaper domestic/regional ones.

Europe award route maps

I highly recommend you print the following part of the post and use it as a worksheet when searching.

I really would just go down the list, inputting city pairs into the one-way award search until I find something I might be able to make work.

After searching, I found this flight (JFK-AMS) on March 29 in the 60k SkyMiles tier.

Next, because my origin isn’t New York, I need to find a way to get from Charleston (CHS) to JFK. Just fire up the one-way search and start punching in. Note: The magic number here is 25k miles to know that you’ve found low-price award seats.

Ok, I’m hitting a wall: the best I can price out is for 40k miles from CHS – LGA:

Now, if I have the extra miles, I could decide that I’m satisfied with this option and pay the extra 15k miles it will require to book–bringing the grand total from 60k to 75k–but, determined to book this trip with only 60k miles, I go back to the drawing board and the cycle repeats.

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